Somalia Pirates Living the High Live In Robyn Hunter article “Somalia Pirates Living the High Live.” Hunter discusses how this extremist group came up, and how they are living their life. According to Hunter, most of the Somalia pirates are from a region called Portland. Hunter says, according to a BBC reporter Abdi Farhan’ They have money; they have power and they are getting stronger by the day, ‘he continue by saying that those Somalia extremist have almost everything they need in their life’ They wed the most beautiful girls; they are building big houses; they have new cars; new guns,’ All this information’s showing us how those pirates grow up fast and become one of the most dangerous group in the Somali coast. Hunter says that most of
The article Into the Dark Water by Lauren Tarshis is about when the most massive, high in technology, indestructible ship sunk. The Titanic of course. Also when passenger and survivor Jack Thayer shared his journey, through his writing with author Lauren Tarshis. It makes the article more intriguing to use quotes because it makes you feel as if you are on the ship on that night.
Reading the book, The Other Side of the River, by Alex Kotlowitz, the author writes about the relationship between two towns in Michigan, and the death of a young boy named Eric McGinnis. The two towns, Benton Harbor and St. Joseph, are called the “Twin Cities”, but are ironically not related in any way. St. Joseph is 95 percent white, while Benton Harbor is impoverished and is 92 percent black. Throughout the book Kotlowitz questions the residents from both towns and how they are affected by the environment around them. The author also starts with the climax on the first page of the book – the death of Eric, and uses this as an technique to tell the story of the disagreements between the two towns.
Marriage is important in human society. Marriage is “the customs, rules, and obligations that establish a special relationship between a sexually cohabitating adult male and female, between them and any children they produce, and between the kin of the bride and groom” (Arenson, and Miller-Thayer 520). Most of the cultures are used to seeing only female and male getting married but looking deeper into the society; we can see there are more to it. There are many different types of marriages. In an ethnography called, Guest of the Sheik, by Elizabeth Warnock Fernea, she talks about her experiences in a small rural village of El Nahra in southern Iraq. Ethnography is “comprised of the writings of the anthropologist, detailing the life ways of a particular culture, investigated by means of direct fieldwork” (1). As she gets accepted by the women of the villages, she gets a more inclusive view of the culture.
Amos Kincaid was born to Delilah Kincaid in November 1833. Jake Kincaid, a trapper and dowser was the father of Amos, and left every couple of months to continue trapping. He would return in the later months to visit Amos, for Delilah died giving birth and Jake wasn’t prepared to raise him. For the first majority of his life, Amos was raised by his aunt Rebecca and his uncle Gil. Rebecca was kind hearted but couldn’t bear children. Over time Rebecca taught Amos to read and write, along with some children from the Native American tribes. This ended however when Rebecca came down with smallpox. Which she obtained from tending to the Native American children, who didn’t want to receive the vaccination. Rebecca then begged Gil to shoot her to relieve
“Ship Breaker”a novel by Paolo Bacigalupi has a futuristic twist that is known to be a science fiction replica of our world. Although my first thoughts of the novel where of a ship that ended up in the middle of an ocean of sand, due to global warming, turned into a fascinating story that gives the reader an unthinkable twist towards humanity and its pity for selfishness. Juxtaposed by multiple life changing disasters (such as melted ice caps and the loss of every costal islands) Nailer, Nita, and Tool will soon come to see the reality of greed and loyalty. Everything starts once a young teen named Nailer who was a ship breaker that salvages parts for money saves a young teen named Nita (a rich and well educated teen who comes from a powerful family). Nita enters Nailers life once a heavy storm takes place where she was cursing. At this point Nailer and his crew were walking along the ocean when they suddenly stumbled upon lucky girl (a.k.a Nita) wrecked ship. Throughout the story Nailer, Nita, and Tool face difficult situations where their beliefs change. They demonstrate that greed is more important than loyalty.
African Americans have been discriminated and were not treated fairly from the beginning of the American colonies up to the 1960s. Their history included about 250 years of slavery followed by another 100 years of discrimination. However, many people state that throughout the 1800s, the whaling industry helped African Americans thrive as a race. In addition, they were treated as equals and could gain glory and wealth from it. In most cases, this is not true because negroes for three main reasons. Almost all African people did not receive high positions on their crew ships. Also, they experienced segregation on ships and were treated not equally. Finally, they were taken for their cheap and hard labor in a dangerous, unrewarding industry. Using internet sources and the novel, In The Heart of The Sea, by Nathaniel Philbrick, African Americans in the whaling industry had low status within crews and faced harsh working conditions as well as discrimination and racism.
Guilt by association is apparent in the book Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford, when every Japanese American is blamed for the attacks on Pearl Harbor. In the book Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet, the main character, Henry, becomes friends with a Japanese-American girl. named Keiko. As normal as this relationship sounds, the setting takes place in the United States during the time of World War II; right after the attacks on Pearl Harbor and attacks on China. Instead of blaming the terrorists that committed the act, the government of the United States and China blame the entire Japanese community with no factual evidence. With the fear of Henry’s father getting mad at him, Henry decides to hide the fact that he is
Maya Angelou once said, “I can be changed by what happens to me, but I refuse to be reduced by it.” This quote encompasses the idea that change is inevitable. A person is involved in numerous relationships during their lifetime and what happens within them can change who they become in the future. Within the novel, Hotel on the Corner of Bitter and Sweet by Jamie Ford, the relationships that Henry Lee has developed throughout his lifetime have shaped him into the person he is today.
The Jungle is book that takes the reader in a period in time where the “American Dream” was the only thing worth believing in the daily job struggles of immigrants in America during the early twentieth century. What is the American Dream? It is said that any man or woman willing to work hard in this country and work an honest day is capable living and could support his family and have an equal opportunity to success. Although The Jungle was taken account more on how the meat production was disgusting and unhealthy for production and consumption. However many missed the real message of this book in which Sinclair wants to engage the reader in particular scenario of the failure of capitalism. According to Sinclair, socialism is the only way out of the failure of capitalism. It is the way that all problems can be solved and works for the benefit of everyone where capitalism works against the people. The slow destruction of Jurgis’s family at the hands of a cruel and unfair economic and social system demonstrates the effect of capitalism on the working class. As the immigrants, who believe an idealistic faith in the American Dream of hard work leading to material success, are slowly used up, tortured, and destroyed.
The Slave Ship was written by Marcus Rediker and it tells several accounts of the African slave trade as well as the world of the middle passage. The author discusses the nature of the slave ship and the African paths to the middle passage. Rediker also mentions the lives of historical figures (Olaudah Equiano, James Field Stanfield, and John Newton) and the roles that they had during the Atlantic slave trade. For the African captives, the sailors, and captains, the slave ship was seen as a wooden, floating, traveling dungeon and a place of terror and survival, which are also the overall main themes of the book.
Now, the film Sea Hawk can be quite deceiving unless you look at the somewhat hidden meaning behind these pirates. In the back of all of these pirates' minds, they were doing everything to supply their own self-fish needs and wishes. The pirates portrayed in the movie placed themselves on the side where they
We all know that why oceans are important for us and why we need to take actions towards the preservation and keeping our oceans clean from plastic. In article “Our oceans are turning into plastic… are we?” Susan Casey has tried to inform the general audience about the problems caused by plastic in oceans. Susan Casey has strong credentials for writings this article because she already has wrote many works about the oceans and marine life such as The Devil's Teeth: A True Story of Obsession and Survival Among America's Great White Sharks. Furthermore she also worked in editorial tams of two movies Into Thin Air and The Perfect Storm. So this shows that she is well experienced in writing works about oceans and marine life. Using her previous
The Open Boat, written by Stephen Crane is discusses the journey of four survivors that were involved in a ship wreck. The oiler, the cook, the captain, and the correspondent are the survivors that make onto a dingey and struggle to survive the roaring waves of the ocean. They happen to come across land after being stranded in the ocean for two days and start to feel a sense of hope that they would be rescued anytime soon. They began feeling down as they realize nobody was going to rescue them and make an attempt to reach shore. The story discusses an external conflict of man vs nature to help state clearly the central idea. The central idea of the story conveys man’s success against nature when ones’ abilities are combined together to increase the chances of survival. The use of 3rd person limited omniscience and character analysis helps to explain how the journey of the men’s survival to get out of the ocean and reach shore is able to succeed while Stephen Crane uses symbolism to demonstrate the unity created amongst the survivors.
Unlike animals, humans are able to observe past the mere monochromatic vision of survival. We have an impeccable ability to desire more than just living to breed, and breeding only to someday perish. Thus, we gradually brush this canvas with the colours of ethics, control, and knowledge. Whether the colours fade or become prominent through time, this canvas becomes our perception of normality and we allow it to justify our actions; favorable or harmful. We, as well as the narrator in the short story The Hunt by Josephine Donovan represent this. However, because of the narrator’s difference in perception, self-indulgence, and greed for power, the story introduces a feeling of infuriation to the reader.
Have you ever watched the movie Pirates of the Caribbean? If you have you may or may not think that’s how the life of a pirate was in the 1700s. This is necessarily true though. I believe that the life of a pirate is not as glamorous as Hollywood portrays it.